With a , Americans can鈥檛 help but be sucked eyeballs-elongated into the churning daily descriptions of federal buffoonery, cronyism and disruptive change.
Whether you are aghast or delighted, you undoubtedly are watching all of this national drama with mouth agape. While that鈥檚 great for and for the country鈥檚 largest publications, this surging supernova of democratic dysfunction simultaneously blots out many local issues that also should be demanding your attention.
Even if you鈥檝e kept up with the most-recent apex controversies 鈥 such as Rep. Tulsi Gabbard鈥檚 ill-advised trip to Syria, the public payoff of the ex-police chief, rail budget聽disasters, etc. 鈥 countless other local stories are being buried or covered up through shrinking access to public information as well as centralized attention on the shiniest of orange-tinted objects.
To help counter monomania, I鈥檝e picked out a few closer-to-home curiosities to bring back the fickle public glare in this direction. Feel free to add more in the reader comments below.
鈥 Impending threats to the church-state divide: Apparently, when a higher power isn鈥檛 听辞谤 , is busy contemplating and intervening in Office of Hawaiian Affairs听诲别肠颈蝉颈辞苍蝉.
Chairwoman Rowena Akana recently was ousted from her job, but not before she told the OHA board about her meeting prep and spiritual support, which included opening her Bible to Ezekiel 3, and reading about the people who wouldn鈥檛 listen to her.
Akana warned She then added,
While religious references occasionally surface in public discourse about non-religious topics, most public officials understand the critical need for in all matters fundamental to this polytheistic nation in terms of its pragmatic everyday business. Yet as this country on the national level, locals also will be tempted to try such .
鈥 Revenue streams and journalistic resources: Not to be impiously prudish here, but is the Honolulu Star-Advertiser really so desperate for money that it needs to publish full-color advertisements on the back of its sports pages 鈥 adjacent to scores for high-school activities 鈥 as illustrations of the city鈥檚 wide selection of 鈥渁dult鈥 DVDs, clubs with 鈥渄ancing girls鈥 and 鈥渕assage鈥 parlors?
I understand we鈥檙e not living in the idealized 1950s here, but the concept of a 鈥渇amily鈥 newspaper seems to me to include the idea that I shouldn鈥檛 need to explain to my 9-year-old daughter over breakfast why those women in the newspaper like to dance around a pole.
If a bit of moral high ground could be taken there, and some revenue is lost, I recommend rebalancing resources by cutting the 鈥淧a鈥檌na鈥 and 鈥淜eiki Athletes鈥 sections of Oahu Publications Inc.鈥 sister-tabloid MidWeek. Pages and pages of awkward group photos at social gatherings/public events and snapshots of kids playing sports really doesn鈥檛 classify as journalism of any significant sort in an age of social media.
Couldn鈥檛 that ink and paper be used for something a bit more substantive in support of a stronger democracy? If nothing else, for page fillers, how about just running the full 聽opinions about its worst offenders, ?
鈥 Students deserve respect and credit, too: Along this transparency vein, local media organizations also make themselves look weak and petty when they don鈥檛 attribute original journalistic work from competing sources. That seems to be a common practice on Oahu, so I want to give belated kudos to the group of University of Hawaii journalism students that broke a bouncy social-media story recently, only to have that work appropriated by 鈥渢he pros.鈥
These students have been part of a larger team developing a digital media organization dubbed (which I advise).
Last semester, they ran across an illegal trampoline at Pounders Beach on the North Shore. They tried to get basic journalistic questions answered: Who put the trampoline there? Is the trampoline allowed to be there? Is this creating any public safety hazards?
But they were put off by spokespeople for the state Department of Land and Natural Resources, including communications specialist Deborah Ward, who only agreed to answer questions via email and told Ho鈥檃 reporter Danielle Vallejo at one point: 鈥淵ou are just a student. You take what we give you, and that鈥檚 that.鈥
Despite such friction, the students created , with photos and video, and it was a social-media hit, garnering . Then along came Hawaii News Now 鈥 with its dubious practice of claiming 鈥渆xclusive鈥 stories 鈥 to produce , by reporter Jobeth Devera, on the same subject.
Compare the two, and then think about the craftsmanship of this HNN line: 鈥淭he state said it removed the trampoline once before, but another showed up, and now droves of visitors are flocking to the quiet, relatively empty area, all thanks to the internet.鈥 Why did the state remove it? Who is 鈥渢he internet鈥? Could Devera contort her piece more to avoid giving credit where credit is due?
This line, though, is the face slapper: 鈥淪tate officials told Hawaii News Now the trampoline will come down for good, once the department receives the proper funding.鈥
Even though they didn鈥檛 get the responses they wanted, the Ho鈥檃 student journalists at least asked some tough questions in the face of this assertion, such as: How much would this removal cost? Who would pay for it? When might it happen?
Devera instead appeared to blow those concerns off, writing 鈥淣o word on when that will happen,鈥 which sounds a bit like maybe we could just send the bill to Mexico, for the border wall.
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About the Author
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Brett Oppegaard has a doctorate degree in technical communication and rhetoric. He studies journalism and media forms as an associate professor at the University of Hawaii Manoa, in the School of Communications. He also has worked for many years in the journalism industry. Comment below or email Brett at brett.oppegaard@gmail.com.
Reader Rep is a media criticism and commentary column that is independent from Civil Beat鈥檚 editorial staff and does not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of Civil Beat.